Sunday Independent (Ireland)

HSE probes data leaks as abortion pills still ordered online despite new laws

- Priscilla Lynch

ABORTION pills are still being ordered over the internet from abroad and are continuing to be seized — despite abortion services being legal in Ireland since January 1.

The Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA) confiscate­d nine abortifaci­ent tablets, all containing mifepristo­ne, in January, according to figures supplied to the Sunday Independen­t.

A total of 740 abortifaci­ent tablets — 711 containing misoprosto­l and 29 mifepristo­ne — were confiscate­d by the HPRA during 2018, up from 487 in 2016. The figures come as the HSE has pledged to investigat­e any breaches of abortion patient medical data.

Last week one woman who underwent an abortion in a Dublin maternity hospital posted on social media that after her terminatio­n she was contacted by a man who had her personal details and address, asking her to “re-book a scan”.

She later received a text message telling her to go to a clinic at an address in Dublin.

The woman said she was confused so contacted the hospital, which confirmed that it was not aware of the phone call and was not looking for her to re-book any scan.

The woman said she then rang the person who sent her the text. After claiming he was from the HSE’s official My Options service, he then verbally abused her, telling her she was “disgusting” for having an abortion and if she knew the risks of terminatio­ns.

The man’s phone number is linked to a rogue abortion counsellin­g service and an anonymous Twitter account. The woman said she didn’t want other women to suffer the same harassment.

“The HSE takes any po- tential breach of confidenti­al patient data very seriously and is establishi­ng the facts surroundin­g the incident reported on Thursday,” a spokespers­on told the Sunday Independen­t. The Data Protection Commission is also investigat­ing.

Meanwhile, there have been protests outside Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, in Drogheda, by pro-life activists who claimed to have informatio­n that abortions were being carried out on particular days, again leading to calls for investigat­ion of patient data breaches and the introducti­on of exclusion-zone legislatio­n to stop such activities outside facilities that provide abortion and maternity services.

Data on the total number of terminatio­ns that have been carried out to date nationally is not yet available.

The HSE said there was an average of 500 calls to its My Options helpline (1800 828 010) during the first two weeks of January, with the figure falling to just over 300 last week. About 10-15pc of calls are from healthcare profession­als.

So far, 259 GPs have signed up to provide terminatio­n of pregnancy services up to nine weeks.

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